Modernism, Women and the stram of onsciousness Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
The period between 1880 and 1930 marked the British literature. The last
decade of the 19th century faced the death of the Victorian novel which focused
more on the society and its evolution; the nineties was ready to go toward progress;
it was like a bridge between the Victorian and the modernist movement.
The Occident of the 1880 witnessed the appearance of a new concept of the
society based on reason; leaving religion and faith. In order to develop this society
of reason, Freud introduced psycho-analysis. The reason goes with the conscious
and the psycho-analysis goes with the unconscious .Virginia Woolf was the first
British writer to translate the psycho-analysis of Freud, to introduce the unconscious
in the modern literature, and then to add a new dimension in the reason. The
psycho-analysis was defined as the aesthetic of the modern and Virginia Woolf set
it in her turn as the modernist aesthetic with the aim to give the exact and perfect
image of the inner world of the human being.
Woolf challenged the question of women and fought against the stereotypes
attributed to them by the patriarchal society, she wanted women to have all the
rights, more importantly the right to education and having a legacy and unlike some
women; Woolf was convinced that women can enjoy their equality with men.
This research intends to show how modernism as a movement witnessed in
England a rapid evolution due to the Russian, the German and the French great
writers and this acceleration in the growth shows that the movement was needed
and wanted by the British society so it first evolved in London. It also demonstrates
how it gave birth to the British novelist Virginia Woolf who was herself influenced
by the Russians, the Germans and especially by the French. It explains how
modernism was the inspiration for this feminist writer in creating the stream of
consciousness and in writing fiction like A Room of One’s Own; an essay in which
Woolf deals with women and fiction and gender issues through centuries with the
message that a woman must have money and a room of her own in order to write
fiction.